

Whitehead says in his introduction: “I invite you to relish in these oratories, find what you need and harvest earnestly so as to save the roots, because now more than ever we need these stories: stories of Earth, mothers, queer love, trans love, animality, kinship, and a fierce fanning of care.” Jemisin, and countless others who can hold biting social commentary with lush, sometimes brutal, always loving stories about imagining what the future can look like, and life after “the end”.

It follows in the footsteps of other great writers like Octavia E. Love After the End adds itself to one of the most exciting developments in speculative fiction (for me, anyways), where marginalized writers are truly creating art that is entirely new to mainstream publishing.

That doesn’t mean it’s all daisies – these stories are messy, complicated, and deeply human. This book looks to answer just that, without the constraints of Western thought of apocalypse meaning bunkering down with guns where it’s every man for himself. Many dystopias or speculative fiction revolves around just before the end but what happens when the end comes, but you keep on living? Because for most marginalized groups, the end of the world has already happened, many times over. Love After the End is perfect Pride & Indigenous History month reading – it is a short story anthology edited by Joshua Whitehead, of all Two-Spirit & Indigiqueer writers on imagining what the future can look like after the apocalypse has already come.

It is also a reminder of the painful battles 2SLGBTQIA+ and Indigenous peoples have fought for to remember the painful, traumatic histories and the fight to dedicate time to honour and celebrate our stories, although we can also do this all year round! Happy Pride and Indigenous History Month! June is a time of a celebration of how far we’ve come and the necessity of celebrating amidst oppression.
